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#pfizer vaccine
chalkrevelations · 2 years
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Got Covid-boostered at the pop-up vaccine clinic at work - not working today, but ran by because I knew it would be easy. Expecting some fatigue, as that's par for the course, for me. Heading home to take a nap, hopefully won't sleep for 20 hours of the next 24. But meanwhile, queue is even more in charge than usual. Catch y'all on the flip.
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adayephoto · 3 years
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Dr. Mike Lauzardo Photo Feature
I had the pleasure of shadowing pulmonologist and deputy director of the Emerging Pathogens Institute Dr. Mike Lauzardo who is also the director of the UF Health Screen, Test & Protect initiative which educates and oversees Covid-19 vaccinations to students, faculty and staff at the University of Florida and in the Gainesville community. 
Over the course of a few weeks, I was able to shadow Dr. Lauzardo who has held more than 70 town hall meetings for UF faculty and staff, went on a press tour conducting interviews to educate and update people on the Covid-19 pandemic and encourage vaccinations and has helped Alachua County vaccinate more than 11,000 individuals. 
In an audacious push to vaccinate 20,000 people a week for six weeks in Alachua County, more than 5,200 University of Florida students and Alachua County residents received a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium within the first week.
More than 80,000 people in Alachua County have received at least one vaccine shot as of the beginning of April, according to health department officials, but this initiative aims to spread the protection provided by the vaccines to a broader segment of the population in Alachua County.
“Even though we all don’t necessarily have the same risk of the same consequences, the way out of this is through immunity, and the safest and best way to get immunity is to get a vaccine.” said Lauzardo. Immunized college students can be “dead ends” for the virus’ spread, enabling them to play a key role in protecting their communities and helping everyone return to pre-pandemic life.”
For more information on Covid-19 please visit the UF Health Screen, Test & Protect website.
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dillyt · 7 months
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Great news for uninsured adults in the USA who want a COVID-19 booster! It now appears that ALL CVS locations are now active participants in the Bridge Access Program. The Bridge Access Program gives out free Covid-19 vaccinations to 18+ adults who otherwise can't afford one, so if you have a CVS near you, please go get one! For others who don't have a CVS near them, please go to vaccines.gov, click on "Find Covid-19 vaccines", fill out which vaccines you prefer (you can mix different vaccines if you have to so i reccomend just marking all of them for the age groups you need), and when the next page loads mark the "Bridge Access Program Participant" option to see only locations that are Bridge Access Program participants. Hopefully, other places that aren't CVS will start participating soon, so just check back every so often to see if there are any updates. The CDC Bridge Access Program website also has more details on what locations will be participating, but only CVS is appearing as an active participant on the vaccines.gov location finder at the moment.
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katchwreck · 1 year
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zuko-always-lies · 2 years
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If you live in the U.S. and you’re 12+, you’re eligible for the updated bivalent anti-omicron booster shot, and it should be available in your  local pharmacy. 
Please reblog this post, as there’s been very little news coverage and shockingly little propagation of information about the availability of updated boosters.
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It’s Not News, Nor ‘Scandalous,’ That Pfizer Trial Didn’t Test Transmission
SciCheck Digest The COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials were designed to study the vaccine’s safety and efficacy in preventing symptomatic disease, not transmission. But online publications now misleadingly present the fact that the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was not tested for transmission as a “shocking admission” and proof that the company and the government lied. The authorized or approved…
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jjbizconsult · 2 years
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COVID - 19 Omicron Vaccine from Pfizer and Moderna
COVID – 19 Omicron Vaccine from Pfizer and Moderna
COVID 19 Omicron Vaccines The COVID-19 strain Omicron has taken over as the predominant strain globally. Boosters that specifically target this variety are soon to be made available. According to Moderna and Pfizer, new booster shots that target the Omicron BA.1 subvariant, which predominated in the United States in January, are about to be made available to the general public, subject to…
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joseywritesng · 2 years
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Pfizer plans a vaccine against all coronaviruses
Pfizer plans a vaccine against all coronaviruses
June 30, 2022 – Ask a celebrity sibling and they’ll tell you they don’t come close to getting the same attention. The same goes for coronaviruses – the one that causes COVID-19 has been in the spotlight for over 2 years now, while the others are currently circulating in relative obscurity. Knowing that one of the other coronaviruses could pose a serious future threat, Pizer and his partner…
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americanmysticom · 2 years
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Reactivation of Chickenpox Virus Following COVID-19 Injections on the Rise
Reports of people being diagnosed with shingles on the rise
By Meiling Lee June 22, 2022 Epoch Times
Doctors and scientists are seeing an increase in the reactivation of the chickenpox virus, known as varicella-zoster virus (VZV), following the COVID-19 injections.
The chickenpox virus is one of the eight herpes viruses known to infect humans. After a person contracts and recovers from chickenpox, the virus never leaves the body but lies dormant in the nervous system for life.
The chickenpox virus will show up as shingles, or herpes zoster (HZ) when it gets reactivated.
Federal health authorities claim that there’s no correlation between COVID-19 injections and shingles, but studies show that there is a higher incidence of shingles in people who’ve received the vaccine.
Israel was one of the earlier countries to publish a case series of six women (out of 491 participants) with an autoimmune disorder who developed shingles 3 to 14 days after receiving the first or second dose of Pfizer COVID-19 shot. None of the 99 participants in the control group developed shingles. The study was published in the journal Rheumatology in April 2021.
“To our knowledge, there were no reports of varicella-like skin rash or HZ in the mRNA-based vaccines COVID-19 clinical trials and our case series is the first one to report this observation in patients within a relatively young age range: 36–61, average age 49 ± 11 years,” the authors wrote.
They hoped that publishing the case series would “raise awareness to a potential causal link between COVID-19 vaccination as a trigger of HZ reactivation in relatively young patients with stable AIIRD [autoimmune inflammatory rheumatic diseases].”
READ MORE
https://www.theepochtimes.com/reactivation-of-chickenpox-virus-following-covid-19-injections-on-the-rise_4549574.html
[And in most circumstance, that realization has a specific point of reflection. It’s almost as though the impetus to ‘do no harm’ has been replaced.]
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cdf2 · 2 years
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After 270 days, vaccinated immunity fell to negative values (-3% & -10%)
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reportwire · 2 years
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Pfizer COVID Vaccine Saved 110,000 American Lives, Study Says
Pfizer COVID Vaccine Saved 110,000 American Lives, Study Says
By Robert Preidt HealthDay Reporter               HealthDay Reporter MONDAY, May 16, 2022 (HealthDay News) — As the United States mourns one million deaths from COVID-19, a new study indicates the grim tally could have been worse. Use of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine prevented more than 110,000 deaths and 690,000 hospitalizations in the United States in 2021, researchers report. The…
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reality-detective · 7 days
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Pfizer 🤔
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Two Idaho lawmakers have introduced a bill to charge those who administer mRNA vaccines with a misdemeanor.
Sen. Tammy Nichols, R-Middleton, and Rep. Judy Boyle, R-Midvale, sponsored HB 154. It was introduced in the House Health & Welfare Committee on Feb. 15 by Nichols. According to the bill text, "A person may not provide or administer a vaccine developed using messenger ribonucleic acid technology for use in an individual or any other mammal in this state."
That person would then be charged with a misdemeanor.
Nichols said during her presentation to the committee, "We have issues this was fast tracked."
Nichols said there is no liability, informed consent or data on mRNA vaccines. She later clarified she was referring to the two COVID-19 vaccines, Pfizer and Moderna.
"I think there is a lot of information that comes out with concerns to blood clots and heart issues," Nichols said.
Rep. Ilana Rubel, D-Boise, questioned Nichols' statement that the vaccines were fast-tracked. She said her understanding was that the vaccines were approved and survived the testing, later approved by the FDA.
Nichols said she is finding it "may not have been done like we thought it should've been done."
"There are other shots we could utilize that don't have mRNA in it," Nichols said.
MRNA is a molecule that assists in making proteins. The COVID-19 vaccines, which are known as mRNA vaccines, help your body make proteins that mimic the COVID virus to help bodies fight off the infection, according to John Hopkins Medicine. MRNA was discovered in the early 1960's, John Hopkins states. Some were used to fight the Ebola virus. Researchers are also currently working to use mRNA to prevent other respiratory viruses.
The bill requires a future vote in the committee to pass onto the House floor for debate.
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mysharona1987 · 1 year
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